The Department of the Interior (DOI) announced a series of priorities that target conservation, hunting and other recreation, natural resource stewardship and growth. The Make America Beautiful Commission, which includes several Trump administration cabinet members and is chaired by DOI Secretary Doug Burgum, released what it calls MABA 250, a strategic initiative to serve as a framework for future conservation policies. 

“By honoring our past while building for our future, through responsible conservation, the MABA 250 initiative’s groundbreaking framework will ensure our nation’s treasured lands and historic legacy are responsibly managed and preserved for centuries to come,” said Secretary Burgum.  

RMEF President/CEO Kyle Weaver (left) and RMEF Chief Conservation Officer Blake Henning (right) during a visit with Secretary Doug Burgum (middle) in his Washington, D.C., office 
(Photo credit: Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation)  

Key priorities include balancing stewardship and economic growth, increasing access for hunting, fishing and other recreation, expanding voluntary conservation, reducing red tape by extremists and bureaucracy, and recovering species and supporting habitat. 

Below is the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation’s stance about the commission’s work: 

RMEF commends the Make America Beautiful Commission appointed by President Trump for its strategic initiative, MABA 250. The priorities laid out in MABA 250 align with our mission to ensure the future of elk, other wildlife, their habitat and our hunting heritage. We look forward to increasing the pace of our shared work priorities, including expanding public access for hunting and fishing, enhancing wildlife habitat on public lands, supporting private conservation and stewardship, and reducing red tape that slows this work down.  

We are particularly heartened by the MABA 250 Commission’s recognition of the conservation achievement of the Great American Outdoor Act (GAOA), which provided permanent funding for the Land and Water Conservation Fund (LWCF). RMEF has worked with federal and state agencies in cooperation with private landowners to increase and improve public access and quality wildlife habitat with LWCF investments.  

The Trump administration’s decision to redirect nearly $8 million to grants supporting big-game migration corridors builds on the great success of Secretarial Order 3362. RMEF encourages Congress to codify those executive actions by passing the Wildlife Movement Through Partnerships Act.  

Also aligned with these priorities is RMEF’s top federal legislative agenda item, the Fix Our Forests Act. This comprehensive bipartisan forest management package reduces red tape and litigation that currently hinders habitat improvement in our national forests and is critical to improving public forest landscapes. To address voluntary conservation of our forests, we seek to include a Forest Conservation Easement Program in a Farm Bill.  

Click here to view the DOI news release.  

About the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation   
Now in its fifth decade of Conserving America’s Big Game, RMEF will extend its impact on habitat and public land access to 10 million acres by 2030. RMEF conserves and enhances habitat for elk and all big game, opens and improves access for hunting and other outdoor recreation, conducts science-based wildlife research and ensures the future of our hunting heritage through advocacy, outreach and education. Members, volunteers and supporters nationwide help RMEF further its mission. Find out more and join the movement at rmef.org or 800-CALL-ELK.

(Photo credit: Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks)